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JB_Brother_4446
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Indeed Luke is not a first hand but he interview those who were there.Matthew, Mark and Luke are not first hand accounts
Indeed Luke is not a first hand but he interview those who were there.Matthew, Mark and Luke are not first hand accounts
A first hand account (John) could have been written later then the second hand account (Mark)According to tradition, the Gospel of Matthew was also written by one of the apostles, Matthew. But most scholars do not believe that any of the gospels were first hand accounts and Mark is generally believed to be the oldest with John being written several decades later.
Matthew is a first hand account. Matthew was an Apostle, chosen by Jesus himself.Matthew, Mark and Luke are not first hand accounts
Just because tradition came earlier doesn’t make it better. For example, the first person to mention gospels that he claims were written by Matthew and Mark was Papias, but he seems not to have been held in high regard. According to Eusebius in his Church History, Papias was “a man of exceedingly small intelligence” (3.39).And tradition came way before modern scholarship.
What parts of tradition do you find reliable?Just because tradition came earlier doesn’t make it better. For example, the first person to mention gospels that he claims were written by Matthew and Mark was Papias, but he seems not to have been held in high regard. According to Eusebius in his Church History, Papias was “a man of exceedingly small intelligence” (3.39).
Papias also tells a story about how Judas died, supposedly from one of his reliable sources. He says that after Judas betrayed Jesus, he was punished so that his body swelled up to such an enormous size that he could not even squeeze onto a street with buildings on either side and that not even his head would fit. His genitals swelled up and emitted pus and worms and then he died on his own land where his innards spilled out. Papias claims that even in his own day more than a century later, the stench was so great that people would have to hold their noses when they walked by this field (Bart Ehrman, Jesus Before the Gospels, p. 29). This story about Judas is hardly believable, so everything in tradition is not all that reliable.
It appears that Eusebius was about the only one who didn’t hold St. Papias in “high regard” and that wasn’t because of the story of Judas but because St. Papias, according to Eusebius, shared what Eusebius considered to be the chiliastic views of St. Justin Martyr and St. Irenaeus. Unfortunately, we have nothing to base that claim upon except Eusebius since none of the writings of St. Papias survive except in fragment form quoted by other writers. So St. Papias can’t really defend himself from Eusebius’ claims and disparagement now, can he?Just because tradition came earlier doesn’t make it better. For example, the first person to mention gospels that he claims were written by Matthew and Mark was Papias, but he seems not to have been held in high regard. According to Eusebius in his Church History, Papias was “a man of exceedingly small intelligence” (3.39).
He obviously wasn’t held in sufficient regard so that lots of copies of his work were made and it was preserved in more than the scattered quotes we have now.It appears that Eusebius was about the only one who didn’t hold St. Papias in “high regard” and that wasn’t because of the story of Judas but because St. Papias, according to Eusebius, shared what Eusebius considered to be the chiliastic views of St. Justin Martyr and St. Irenaeus. Unfortunately, we have nothing to base that claim upon except Eusebius since none of the writings of St. Papias survive except in fragment form quoted by other writers. So St. Papias can’t really defend himself from Eusebius’ claims and disparagement now, can he?
Papias seems to have been held in sufficiently high regard that he was considered a saint by the early Church. Not so with Eusebius. Perhaps he shouldn’t have spent so much effort or so many words bad-mouthing Papias. A lesson, I suppose, for all of us.
Strange that Ehrman would accept claims about what Papias wrote solely based upon the writings of Eusebius who clearly wasn’t prone to write about Papias without editorializing or picking bones.Papias also tells a story about how Judas died, supposedly from one of his reliable sources. He says that after Judas betrayed Jesus, he was punished so that his body swelled up to such an enormous size that he could not even squeeze onto a street with buildings on either side and that not even his head would fit. His genitals swelled up and emitted pus and worms and then he died on his own land where his innards spilled out. Papias claims that even in his own day more than a century later, the stench was so great that people would have to hold their noses when they walked by this field (Bart Ehrman, Jesus Before the Gospels, p. 29). This story about Judas is hardly believable, so everything in tradition is not all that reliable.
Yeah well that is synoymous with Peter’s description of Judas’ death in Acts 1.Just because tradition came earlier doesn’t make it better. For example, the first person to mention gospels that he claims were written by Matthew and Mark was Papias, but he seems not to have been held in high regard. According to Eusebius in his Church History, Papias was “a man of exceedingly small intelligence” (3.39).
Papias also tells a story about how Judas died, supposedly from one of his reliable sources. He says that after Judas betrayed Jesus, he was punished so that his body swelled up to such an enormous size that he could not even squeeze onto a street with buildings on either side and that not even his head would fit. His genitals swelled up and emitted pus and worms and then he died on his own land where his innards spilled out. Papias claims that even in his own day more than a century later, the stench was so great that people would have to hold their noses when they walked by this field (Bart Ehrman, Jesus Before the Gospels, p. 29). This story about Judas is hardly believable, so everything in tradition is not all that reliable.
Quite the contrary, actually.He obviously wasn’t held in sufficient regard so that lots of copies of his work were made and it was preserved in more than the scattered quotes we have now.
Well, then, if what we read in the gospel of John is hyperbole or if it is to be taken in a figurative sense, then I guess we really don’t have certainty about the scenes which appear in John but not in the Synoptic gospels.People who don’t understand hyperbole should be drawn, quartered, and left for the ravens.
A century later, the stench from their remains will be so great that those walking by will have to hold their noses. *
That was a reference to a story alleged to have been written by Papias and has nothing to do with the Gospel of John.Well, then, if what we read in the gospel of John is hyperbole or if it is to be taken in a figurative sense, then I guess we really don’t have certainty about the scenes which appear in John but not in the Synoptic gospels.
What else makes a point more certain than using hyperbole?Well, then, if what we read in the gospel of John is hyperbole or if it is to be taken in a figurative sense, then I guess we really don’t have certainty about the scenes which appear in John but not in the Synoptic gospels.
Personally, I am opposed to torturing people like that and then murdering them. I don’t believe it would be charitable to do so, and IMHO, charity is the primary virtue.I repeat…
People who don’t understand hyperbole should be drawn, quartered, and left for the ravens.
http://forums.catholic-questions.org/picture.php?albumid=2053&pictureid=17304Personally, I am opposed to torturing people like that and then murdering them. I don’t believe it would be charitable to do so, and IMHO, charity is the primary virtue.
in the case of the Polynesian culture, sticking out your tongue is a universal gesture to look more savage. I agree that your demand that “People who don’t understand hyperbole should be drawn, quartered, and left for the ravens” is, in addition to being against Christian charity, is a rather savage one, since it involves torturing and murdering people who you take to be somewhat disagreeable since they do not understand your perspective on hyperbole.
This isn’t the Polynesian culture.in the case of the Polynesian culture, sticking out your tongue is a universal gesture to look more savage. I agree that your demand that “People who don’t understand hyperbole should be drawn, quartered, and left for the ravens” is, in addition to being against Christian charity, is a rather savage one, since it involves torturing and murdering people who you take to be somewhat disagreeable since they do not understand your perspective on hyperbole.
Where was that done?Using sacred images in a mocking or joking way isn’t right.
-Tim-
My friend, you lack a true and complete understanding of the Nature of GodBecause he wasn’t God the Father (John 14:28)